WBG Submission to the Low Pay Commission May 2023
The Women’s Budget Group submitted a response to the low-pay commission consultation.
Consultation Response
The Women’s Budget Group submitted a response to the Financial Resilience APPG.
The UK economy is continuing to experience significant interlinked shocks with important consequences for living standards, businesses and public finances. Inflation is at the highest level it has been in 40 years, driven mostly by global causes, chief of which is unprecedented high energy costs. Combined with lower-than-inflation wage growth and weakened public services from over a decade of underfunding followed by a global pandemic, women’s financial security is increasingly at risk.
Individual financial autonomy is the best guarantee of financial resilience both in the present and in the future. This is achieved for many people through employment earnings and through adequate social security support. Yet the economic impact of the pandemic and the cost of living crisis is higher on those on low incomes who are more dependent on public services, spend a higher proportion of their income on essentials and have less savings. The increase in the price of food, energy and transport is having the biggest impact on the poorest households.
Poverty is a gendered phenomenon with women more likely to live in poverty than men. As set out in our 2018 report with Coventry women’s organisations, ‘The Female Face of Poverty’, the position of women in the labour market, the design of social security and women’s roles within the family all contribute to women’s vulnerability to poverty 1 .
Due to lower wages and savings, women are less prepared to face the rise in the cost of living. Women’s childcare responsibilities mean that they are less able to increase their hours of work. Women are also the shock absorbers of poverty, going without food and other essentials for themselves to ensure their families needs are met.
Read and dowload the full submission here
[1] WBG with five women’s organisations in Coventry (2018) The Female Face of Poverty
[1] WBG with five women’s organisations in Coventry (2018) The Female Face of Poverty
The Women’s Budget Group submitted a response to the low-pay commission consultation.
Disappointing to see no Employment Bill and no assurances on the Cost-of-Living Crisis, says WBG
This is the second series of briefings on the gendered dimension of the cost-of-living crisis.
After holding it at 5.25% since August last year, it’s good news that the Bank of England has today decided to cut the interest rate to 5%.